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Henry “Harry” Morgan

Henry Harry Morgan
Henry Harry Morgan

 

Henry Morgan’s “Guardian” obituary from 2011:

The actor Harry Morgan, who has died aged 96, was best known as Colonel Sherman T Potter, commander of the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in M*A*S*H, the wonderfully witty and sharp television series set in an army camp during the Korean war. He played Potter, an expert surgeon and a father figure in the camp, from 1978 until 1983.

Those who knew Morgan from films alone might have been surprised by his warm and authoritative performance as Potter. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, as a supporting actor, he played runtish bad guys and worms that seldom turned. He gradually began to reveal a more likable side, as a musician buddy of Glenn Miller (James Stewart) in The Glenn Miller Story (1954) and in the typically bland 50s TV sitcom December Bride (1954-58). Later, he played bark-worse-than-bite establishment figures such as generals, sheriffs, police officers and politicians.

He was born Harry Bratsburg, of Scandinavian descent, in Detroit and grew up in Muskegon, Michigan. After leaving Muskegon high school, he studied law at the University of Chicago until public speaking and debating classes turned him to acting. While working in Washington, selling office furniture, he joined local troupes and then became a member of the Group Theatre in New York. He made his Broadway debut in 1937 in Clifford Odets’s Golden Boy.   At 27, billed as Henry Morgan, he landed a contract with 20th Century-Fox, where his gravelly voice, pint-sized figure and pug-dog features became familiar in war films such as Crash Dive (1943) and A Bell for Adano (1945), and as cowboy Henry Fonda’s pal in William Wellman’s The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), caught up in a lynching party.   In the late 1940s, to distinguish himself from a popular radio comic with the same name, he became Harry Morgan and played several nasty little thugs such as Shorty in The Gangster (1947), and a jumpy bank robber in Wellman’s Yellow Sky (1948). An exception was his role of Edward G Robinson’s superstitious neighbour in All My Sons (1948), the wordy and worthy screen adaptation of Arthur Miller’s play.

In Dark City (1950), an ex-boxer (Morgan) and cardshark (Jack Webb) are at each other’s throats. Webb and Morgan were again teamed as villains in Appointment With Danger (1951). As Officer Bill Gannon, Morgan would later co-star with Webb as Sergeant Joe Friday in the 1967 revival of Dragnet on TV, which ran until 1970, as well as in the 1987 parody movie. In High Noon (1952), Morgan was Sam Fuller, a friend of Gary Cooper’s Marshal Will Kane, who deserts him when he most needs help.   Exuding an air of respectability, Morgan played the tough but reasonable judge in the famous “monkey trial” of 1925, in which a schoolteacher was tried for teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution, in Stanley Kramer’s Inherit the Wind (1960), and was General Ulysses S Grant in How the West Was Won (1962). Later he played sheriffs in a number of westerns, notably in The Shootist (1976), John Wayne’s final film. When Morgan hears that Wayne’s ex-gunfighter has cancer, he starts to whoop and laugh. “The day they lay you away, what I do on your grave won’t pass for flowers!” he yells.

Throughout the next two decades, Morgan was active in films and on television, including the TV movies The Incident (1990), Against Her Will: An Incident in Baltimore (1992) and Incident in a Small Town (1994), in all three of which Walter Matthau, as a small-town lawyer, and Morgan, as a judge, sparred amiably. But it was his Colonel Potter in M*A*S*H that gave him his widest claim to fame, and won him an Emmy in 1980 as outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series. He also appeared as Potter in the spinoff AfterMASH (1983-85), set in a veterans’ hospital in the fictional town of River Bend, Missouri.

Morgan is survived by his second wife, Barbara, whom he married in 1986, and three sons, Christopher, Charles and Paul, from his first marriage, to Eileen, who died in 1985. His son Daniel predeceased him.

• Harry Morgan (Harry Bratsburg), actor, born 10 April 1915; died 7 December 2011

The above “Guardian” obituary can also be accessed online here.

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